Portland Public Library

Loyal but French, the negotiation of identity by French-Canadian descendants in the United States, Mark Paul Richard

Label
Loyal but French, the negotiation of identity by French-Canadian descendants in the United States, Mark Paul Richard
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 351-373) and index
Illustrations
maps
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Loyal but French
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
225088950
Responsibility statement
Mark Paul Richard
Sub title
the negotiation of identity by French-Canadian descendants in the United States
Table Of Contents
Creating a mosaic: Catholic immigrants in a Protestant mill town, 1850-1880 -- The rooster crows: French Canadians become naturalized citizens and democratic voters, 1880-1900 -- Not foreigners but Americans: French Canadians negotiate their identity in the Spindle City, 1880-1900 -- Playing Chopin: French speakers celebrate the demise of Lewiston's Republic majority, 1900-1920 -- The winding road: from Canadien to Franco-American, 1900-1920 -- Competing Americanisms: the Bishops, the Klan, and the intertwined identity of Franco-Americans, 1920-1940 -- Burying the elephant: politics, gender, and ethnic identity in Lewiston, 1920-1940 -- Forging ethnic unions: social, welfare, and credit institutions in the Spindle City, 1920-1940 -- We will earn a living and not merely an existence: Franco-American workers assert their rights, 1920-1970 -- The quiet evolution: Franco-Americans become Americans, 1940-1970 -- Contemporary identity: Americans of French-Canadian descent, 1970-2007
Content
Mapped to